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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1910-05-26, Page 5''Iv'"IICIRSDA'X', MAY 26, I9to MEN'S SUITS $12.50 For this week we are offering a line of 11 fen's and Youth's Fine Worsted Suits,. at prices that should interest every in. tending purchaser. They are strictly up- to -date in every particular, made of high grade English Worsted Cloths, of the latest colorings, Thirty Men's and Youths' Suits, in sizes fl'oni 33 to 42 — Special eh �� price this week V Boys' Clothing We are agents for the celebrated Lion Brand Suits and Knickers for Boys. Our stock is complete. We have the Goods that please the Boys. McGee Sz Campbell 11/4. Clothiers and Men's Furnishers —J. A. Ruddick, Dominion dairy anct cold storage commissioner, receiv- ed last week from London a ease of South African pears in perfect condi- tion. The pears were grown by the Rhodes' Fruit Farms, Ltd., Cape Col- ony, and were procured for Mr. Rud- dick at Covent Garden on April 30, and forwarded to him in cold storage. WHAT TO TELL. If there's something good you know Of another, friend or foe, Something meriting your praise, Though it be in little ways, Something kindly, tender, true, That will hope and faith renew, And lead others like to do, Always tell it, If there's something ill you know Of another, friend or foe, Some mistake that he has made, And the penalty has paid, Something better out of sight, That to drag into the light Would not aid the cause of Right, Never tell it. Whatsoever you may know Of another, friend or foe, If the telling of it would Not result in any good, Know on you there is no call To let censure on hien fall, Speak yon well or not at alt Of another. —Natives of Huron and Bruce coun- ties, now living in Detroit and vicini- ty, are planning to take part in a big reunion of former residents of the Canadian district in Lucknow, from July 31 to August 4th. Many of Detroit's leading citizens are former Lueknow boys, —Wearied by a long hard struggle against ill -health, Harry Bramm, who for three years conducted the Hartley House in Walkerton, ended his life in Toronto on Saturday of last week by shooting himself through the head. Bramm was 00 years of age and lived at 277 Jarvis Street, with his wife and two daughters. SORE FEET AND CHAFED PLACES. `"Zam-Buk" is best for chafed places, sore feet, or inflamed patches, caused by friction. For babies' sensitive skins it is especially adapted, because it is purely herbal composition. Don't apply to the delicate skin of yonr children, either for cuts, sores or skin diseases, the crude salves made up from rancid animal oils and fats, with mineral coloring and scented. matter to hide their n d tl ea unpleasant appearance and ordor 1 Remember whatever gets into the pores, gets into the blood. Stick to nature, and pure natural pro- ducts. Zana-Buk is nature's own heal- er, and is, therefore, not only superior in purity, but also in strength. Cures where other things fail. Use it also for piles, festering sores, varicose ul- cers, cuts, burns, and every -day in- juries. Every home needs it 1 PERT PARAGRAPHS. trND undoubtedly the reason is that the marriages that aren't failures aren't out on the street wailing out tbo fact at the top of their voices. 1 Tile ,people who aro always looking for the -worst of it should eertalniy be gratified when they get a. Perhaps you would rather' beg than steal, but you can't tell till you have tried both, you know, A. good sued royalty is often the chief difference between just plain ly- ing and romancing. How would It do to so conduct our- selves that there would not be such a crying and Bowling need for New Year resolutions? The things that we are going to do aro usually quite different from the things that we arrive to do. • He is more than a usual man who loses his'friends and keeps his money at the same time. Every time a man falls in love he is . just as sure that it is the first time as he is that It will be the last time. Would Like the Change. "Seen the cornet?'' "What comet?" "Why, everybody Is talking about "1 wish the fellows I meet would talk about something interesting like that instead of about what I owe them." The Eternal Feminine. "Are you a suffragist?" "1 es." "Would you mind telling me why?" "Why?" "Yes." "Goodness alive, man 1 Every, wom- an I know is a suffragist." His Taste Observed. "She looks sad," "Yes; her clog Is dead." "How shoekingl" "Isn't it?" "Will she wear mourning?" "No; poor Fido never could endure black," Grouchy. "Beard you were going to leave town." - "Is that why you have such a sunny smile on your hopeful countenance?" As a Bill Collector Knows. "\Vhat is the use of a jolly?" "A jolly?" "It often saves money." Skillful Liar. "Have you an imagination?" "I have." "What do you do with it?" "Hire it out." Limited Powers. The airship is a mighty bird, 13ut I have heard them say - You cannot hatch It from an egg. It has not learned to lay, 13 WINGITAM ADVAN : FREE DEMONSTRATION Madam! you can literally transfigure the whole houso�ake furniture, decorations,floors and woodwork spick.. and - span an and ust as good as new, and at a very low cost,with Don't confuse "Lacqueret" with the ordinary "spongy,tt "stieky't' decorative materials that you have sometimes bought on suspicion and used with disgust. It is something altogether different. "Lac- queret" is neither paint, enamel, nor varnish stain, but a brilliant transparent lacquer made with soluble permanent colors, combined with elastic, hard -drying and lustrous liquid, "Lacqueret" is de- signed for beautifying and preserving old furniture, marred and soiled woodwork, dingy and dirt -stained floors, and a li.undred and one furnishing odds and ends that --worn and marked --disfigure the living rooms, or "clutter" the storeroom or attic. "]Lacqueret" covers up original defects or wood surfaces, blots out the frays and scars of usage and enhances the beauty of the natural grain, as well as restoring original tone and tint. "Lacqueret" is especially adapted for beautifying, and preserving all kinds of furniture and woodwork, such as Baby Carriages Balusters Base Boards Bathrooms Bedsteads Book Cases Bureaus Cabinets Chairs Chiffonier$ China Closets Conunodes Counters Curtain Poles Desks Doors Drawers Hall Trees Ice Chests Japanese Traya Lawn Seats Lounges Mantels Music Racks Picture Frames Porch Furniture Rattan Ware Refrigerators Screen Frames Settees Sewing Machines Shelves Sideboards >n Sofas Stools Tables WainscotIng Window Sills Wood Ceilings And FLOORS NOTE,-'" 4.AOQUEF? ET" is sold In full Imperial measure paoL ges ogle. MADE IN CANADA Manufacturers of all kinds of High-class Varaiehesi Stains, Enamels, Floor Finishes, etc.j PO8 A Free Demonstration will be held in the Store of J. G. Stewart & Co. m Wingharn On TUESDAY, JUNE 7th (ALL DAY) Everybody should attend. A souvenir wilt be given to all ladies and children visiting the store on the day of this demonstration. INVIGORATING TONIC FOR R JH'DOWN PEOPLE Dr. T. A. Slocum Limited, Toronto Miss 1111a Muriel Wood, of Browns. vine, Ont., says : " Two years ago I was going into a decline. I could hardly drag myself across the floor, I could not evreep the carpet, If I went for a drive, I had to lie down when I came back; if I went for a mile on my wheel I was too weak to lift it through the gateway, and last time I came in from having a spin I dropped utterly helpless from fatigue. My father would give me no peaoo until I secured PSYCHINE, knowing it was excellent for decline or weakness. I must say the results are wonderful and people remarked my im- provement. Instead of a little, pale, hollow-cheeked, listless, melancholy girl, I am today full of life, ready for a sleigh -ride,' a skating match, or an eeening party with anyone, and a few months ago I could not struggle to church, 40 rods from my home. I have never had the slightest cause to fear any return of the disease." c For sale by all Druggists and Dealers, 50c and $1.00 ` YCHI a:. RESTORES THE APPETITE i Exercise Care in the Selection of a Bank for the Safeguarding of Your Savings When you realize that over THIRTY-FIVE MILLION DOLLARS are entrusted to the BANK OF HA;tIII roi , you will realize its position in the public; confidence. When you learn that this vast sum has been gradually gathered from a small beginning, over thirty years ago, you will under. stand that, back of this steady C. P. SMITH Wini,ghatn, progress, there must be sound management. By modern, yet conservative, methods, the BANK oi' HAMIL- TON has proved itself to be a worthy custodian of the people's savings. Interest --at highest current rate—credited half -yearly, on deposits of $t.00 and upwards. AGENT Ontario. .Head Otfire, HAMILTO Calaital Psid•up ., iteeerta wird fladiviied p'reflfy etal Amt., •• $2,00,000 L900,000 evti. M1,000,000 {l{ Ottawa, May 13.—The case of Robt. Henderson, the 17 -year-old boy, under sentence of death nextmonth at Peterboro for the murder of an aged woman near Norwood, is under re- view by the justice department. The jury forwarded a recommendation of mercy. The case has not yet gone to the cabinet, After La Grippe "I had suffered several weeks with LaGrippe. Had pains in my head and eyes. It felt as though there was a heavy weight on the top of my head, until it seemed that my brain would burst. I was so nervous that I could not rest or sleep. When I dozed off I would awake with a sudden jerking of my whole body, Dr, Miles' Nervine, Heart Remedy and Nerve and Liver Pills cured me. A number of friends have since realized the sante benefits." MI2S. A:LVIN H. LOCKS, Seabrook, N. II. The after effects of LaGrippe are often more serious than the disease, as it leaves the systein in a weakened condition that invites more serious troubles, such as pneumonia, etc. Dr. Miles' Restorative Nervine should be taken for some time to thoroughly restore nerve strength. Price $1.00 at your druggist. He should supply you. If he does not, send prloe to tier we forward` prap*ld. DPI, MIL*$ 1411010AL. CO., Torentta, MIAMI( VALUABLE Skimmlik is by far the Most impar taut byproduct from the dairy and tate best adapted to varied and profitable uses. A. prominent dairyman says that skimmilk as a human food Is uta. appreelatod by most farmers, but it has been tested under variolas condi- tions by food experts and bas proved a useful portion of an everyday diet for many people. The Use of slsinunilk ought to he encouraged. Every dairy should be equipped with rt good separator, and farmers would find city markets for a large amount of this valuable byproduct. Stammllk has all the protein and half of the full value of the whole milk and is in most localities the most eco- nomical source of animal protein. The food elements in skinnmiik are equal In physiological value to those of meats and are far less expensive. As an article to substitute for water In the preparation of various dishes as well as for others that are made mainly of milk there is no waste, but a decided gain in food value. In mak, lag bread skimmilk will add to the weight and nutritive value of the loaf. Uses In place of water, sufficient flour may be saved to pay for the milk and yet produce a loaf of equal weight and of more actual food value. Milk bread is richer in fatty matter and superior in flesh forming elements, which Is scientifienity explained as be- ing due to the casein of milk being in- eorporated with the fibrin of the flour. The sale of skimmilk to bakers and confectioners should be encouraged and is capable of being largely in- creased. Used in this manner, it tray' be made to net the consumer a dollar a hundred pounds, or more than n large per cent of the farmers and dai- rymen realize for their whole milk. As a food for domestic animals skim - milk occupies the most conspicuous po- sition of any foodstuff, especially as a feed for young end growing animals. It gives the best returns when fed to very young animals, constituting the Larger part of their rations. It is next best for animals making rapid growth,. but which need other feed than milk, mainly of a carbonaceous nature. Ex sept for very young animals skimmilk gives the best returns when used In combination / with other foods, gen- erally grains. No class of live stock will give larger returns for skimmilk than poultry of various kinds. If a premium were offered for the most rapid gains in pig feeding my opinion would be that some man skill woUI TSG A ]SAND SaPARATOR. ed in feeding skimmilk with other foods would carry off the prize. Skim - milk is rich in bone building and blood making constituents, and when we Consider its use for these purposes tied also remember its easy digestibility and that by adding a variety it makes Other food articles more palatable and assists in their digestt ,b we must hold skimmilk as occupying a high place in the list of foodstuffs available on farms. Authorities seem to differ as to the merits of sweet and sour milk as a feed for swine. Calves are next in fa- vor as profitable consumers of skim - milk, and some feeders think that tbey can feed their skimmilk to calves and derive more profit from It than' by feeding it to swine, but this depends to a large extent upon the good quail - ties of the animals being fed. In feeding skimmilk to calves a cent's worth of oilmeal will take the place of a pound of butter fat that bar been removed from the milk. 13e• sides, when the milk is fed warm It is better for the calves than milk that is cold and sour. A young animal that is fed on skim. milk, with mill feed or grain, may be made to weigh almost as much as one of similar breeding, but fed on whole milk, with the same kind of grain, .at one year of age. In feeding skimmilk to calves overfeeding is dangerous and must be avoided. The digestive or- gans of Calves are more eitsily derang- ed than those of the pig, and care must be exercised in their feeding. Some calves Will take more skimmilk than others, and it Is well to study the capacity of each calf and fit the amount of milk to stilt each animal. Some dairymen feed sk!nninilk tt their cows mixed with grain and find It is of more or less valine. It hal also been fed to lambs, horses anti colts With success. C!o Not Exercise In Cold. The cow that is snaking from two tt three pounds of butter each day shout(' not be turned out In a yard In the cold to exercise, else het butter yield will drop. —The Toronto Globe shows an in- crease of 1,301 columns for the four months of 1010 over the same months of last year. The inference is two- fold: (1) The Globe is winning the in- creased confldenoe of the business pub- lic, and, (2) there is increased confide encu among business men for the future outlook for trade. Canada is enjoying A Beason of prosperity, and The Globe is keeping step with the on- wera maroh of the o'ountry., �CAmse aen,krtq 'Means V0011SZ f5fwenk.sktaniqs Warm spring days suggest house cleaning and house cleaning means a new CARPET ,for a certain room, a certain room needs new CURTAINS and a certain room needs a new LINOLEUM or OIL CLOTH. Japanese Matting Floor Oilcloths Scotch Linoleums Rugs soninimismamemmuceinnowasencertainimmammederanymelnempeeseemesrmassmomemessormatookosenel Carpet Squares In Tapestry, Brussels and Velvet You will realize substantial savings if you buy your Spring House Furnishings from us. Carpet Squares $6.60 to $30.00 Number of Small Ends Carpet Cheap See our line of Ladies' Suitings in latest colors. Also our Ladies' .Ready-to.Wear Waists. ionmismisorimeriosielandespriimosamimorlismizsmilm No. 1 Sugar, $5.35 per cwt, cash. ALL KINDS PRODUCE TAKEN. T. A. Mills WI N G HAiM ,i,,,, (fir (`' t p Y'i.'� t!.' ,a.ii. lid, 1, •,,,y,, E Al l N., r ,', 4 , rr u`�\ y I 1 Illi SPECIAL SHOWING OF � , � `, Now Whitewoar and �./� shirt Walsh! t*1 tow; \ RT WikIBTS.�-Women's Waists of White SHIInsertion, in styles to suit all. The Prices �� Persian Lawn nicely trimmed with Lace aro $1,00, 4$1.25, $1.50, 52,00, ;2.60, $3,00 IP'-- i,. I m, '4,414 ,,CORSET rti j\\\ �f1 i►lLfliftlt•(la �i r �A u$�lOtb, ` 1 UNDERSKIRTS In In great variety; all new styles: full, wide make with( . deep flounce of Embroidery and Insertion. Prices are— 75o. 51.00, $1.25, $1,50, I$2.00 1� and $2.50. See our Special at. •Q COVERS ;Special values in Corset , , Co ers : ,,s. v mado of fine �. .lish Cambria; good fitters ; al Y at prices. A Bargain 2SC NIGHT GOWNS Women's Night Gowns, full ' 1 sizes and well made. The ,11 Prices are .,40c, 7Sc, $1'$iltw TOP SKIRTS Lots of styles to eboose rt.''}3'� from; white and navy Duck 1 ti styles, Specialvalue , at. �Nlrifli istliii4, _1� \, STYLISH DRESSES y„i�4l1$1111$!Il'11.4' .1, Women's White Lawn Dreg- + iis,,..et>s ,'' es Princess style nicely i+nuyjeli�r trimmed with fino L'aee and�:� . Insertion. Prices ' Il1li�1di0 begin at $4.54 11 - ,0, ' �f ;; , • ., i// ill>a nollA BARGAINS Pongee Silk, yard wide, natural color, 50o quality—our Price, ... 890 86.inoh Black Taffeta Silk, fine soft weave, dollar value --for.... 750 6Qe and 75c Colored Dress Goods in Fancy, Stripo or Plain; new colors— Oat Price 50c One Thousand Yards Torohon Lace, and Insertion to match, regular 10o quality—on Sale at Half Price.. 50 Scotch Gingham, colored checks, also black and white — our Price '100 COMPARE Remember, the goods are are not buying and if not satisfactory, PRICES . you goods, back we match prices and values with City catalogues; here for your inspection. When buying here, from a picture. You see and handle the we are here to make good. . Money if you want it. IIII EN ISard Coo J �CAmse aen,krtq 'Means V0011SZ f5fwenk.sktaniqs Warm spring days suggest house cleaning and house cleaning means a new CARPET ,for a certain room, a certain room needs new CURTAINS and a certain room needs a new LINOLEUM or OIL CLOTH. Japanese Matting Floor Oilcloths Scotch Linoleums Rugs soninimismamemmuceinnowasencertainimmammederanymelnempeeseemesrmassmomemessormatookosenel Carpet Squares In Tapestry, Brussels and Velvet You will realize substantial savings if you buy your Spring House Furnishings from us. Carpet Squares $6.60 to $30.00 Number of Small Ends Carpet Cheap See our line of Ladies' Suitings in latest colors. Also our Ladies' .Ready-to.Wear Waists. ionmismisorimeriosielandespriimosamimorlismizsmilm No. 1 Sugar, $5.35 per cwt, cash. ALL KINDS PRODUCE TAKEN. T. A. Mills WI N G HAiM